Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


US4386323A - Arrangement for synchronizing the phase of a local clock signal with an input signal - Google Patents

Arrangement for synchronizing the phase of a local clock signal with an input signal
Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US4386323A
US4386323AUS06/227,892US22789281AUS4386323AUS 4386323 AUS4386323 AUS 4386323AUS 22789281 AUS22789281 AUS 22789281AUS 4386323 AUS4386323 AUS 4386323A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
input
clock signal
output
inputs
phase
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Fee Related
Application number
US06/227,892
Inventor
Gerardus L. M. Jansen
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
US Philips Corp
Original Assignee
US Philips Corp
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by US Philips CorpfiledCriticalUS Philips Corp
Assigned to U.S. PHILIPS CORPORATIONreassignmentU.S. PHILIPS CORPORATIONASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST.Assignors: JANSEN, GERARDUS L. M.
Application grantedgrantedCritical
Publication of US4386323ApublicationCriticalpatent/US4386323A/en
Anticipated expirationlegal-statusCritical
Expired - Fee Relatedlegal-statusCriticalCurrent

Links

Images

Classifications

Definitions

Landscapes

Abstract

Synchronizing the phase of a locally generated clock signal with the phase of an input signal is usually effected by using a phase-locked loop, but this has a drawback that a certain run-in time is necessary to be sure that the phase of the clock signal is stable. The present arrangement comprises a delay line (2) having taps (3), the delay line being driven by a crystal oscillator 1. Clock signal versions C1(0), C1(90), C1(180) and C1(270) which are phase shifted relative to one another through 90° available at the successive taps (3). A coincidence detection circuit comprising trigger circuits (9) and a combining network (10) detects the version of the clock signal whose ascending edge, for example, is located nearest to an ascending edge of the data signal, and this version is supplied as the clock signal at an output (8) by the selective control of switches (7) by control signals from the outputs (13) of the network (10).

Description

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The invention relates to an arrangement of a kind suitable for synchronizing the phase of a locally generated clock signal with the phase of an input signal, comprising a clock signal generator and a delay line, an input of which is connected to the generator, the delay line having a plurality of taps which are distributed along the delay line.
Such an arrangement is disclosed in the U.S. Pat. No. 3,509,471. In this known arrangement, the phase of the locally generated clock signal is compared with the phase of the input signal. The phase difference between these two signals is applied to a control element which, using the tapped delay line, causes the phase of the clock signal to be shifted step-by-step until the clock signal is in synchronism with the input signal.
Such an arrangement has the drawback that a certain run-in period is required before the phase of the regenerated clock has been obtained and is stable. In this period no reliable data transport can take place.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is an object of the invention to provide an arrangement of the above kind by means of which it is possible to acquire very rapidly, more specifically within the duration of one cycle of the clock signal, the phase of the input signal and to maintain it thereafter.
According to the invention an arrangement of the above kind is characterized in that each tap of the delay line is connected to an output of the arrangement by a respective controllable switch, that the arrangement further comprises a coincidence detection circuit having inputs and outputs, each input being connected to a respective tap ofthe delay line and each output being connected to a control input of a respective one of the switches and the coincidence detection circuit further being connected to an input terminal to which the input signal is to be applied and being operable for generating, when there occurs coincidence of the input signal, following an edge thereof, with an edge of the clock signal version at one of the taps of the delay line, a control signal at one of the outputs of the coincidence circuit for closing the particular switch connecting a selected tap to said output of the arrangement.
An advantage of the arrangement according to the invention is that, because the absence of counters and dividers, the arrangement can rapidly synchronize a clock signal up to a bit frequency which is equal to the maximum clock frequency of the logic used. When, for example, the logic is realized in LOCMOS, which has now a maximum clock frequency of 20 MHz, then the clock signal can be regenerated up to a bit rate of 20 Mbit/sec.
A preferred embodiment of an arrangement according to the invention for synchronizing the phase of a locally generated clock signal, with the phase of an input signal is characterized in that the coincidence detection circuit comprises a plurality of bistable trigger circuits, each having a trigger input, a data input, a set and a reset input and an output, that each of the trigger inputs is connected to a respective input of the coincidence detection circuit, that all the data inputs are connected to said input terminal, that the coincidence detection circuit further comprises a combining network having inputs and outpus, that the inputs of the combining network are so connected to the trigger circuit outputs as to select the trigger circuit which is triggered first, and that the outputs of the combining network are connected respectively to the outputs of the coincidence detection circuit.
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The invention and its advantages will now be further explained, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, of which:
FIG. 1 shows a preferred embodiment of a synchronizing arrangement according to the invention; and
FIG. 2 shows some time diagrams to illustrate the operation of the synchronizing arrangement shown in FIG. 1.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
In the preferred embodiment of the synchronizing arrangement shown in FIG. 1 an oscillator 1, for example a crystal oscillator, is connected to adelay line 2, which has a number of sections. Thisdelay line 2 has tapping points 3-0, 3-1, 3-2 and 3-3, denoted taps, which are distributed along it. Each section produces the same time delay, which has been so chosen in this example that clock signal versions Cl(O), Cl(90), Cl(180) and Cl(270) whose phase is shifted 90° relative to one another of the clock signal generated by the crystal oscillator 1 are present at the tape 3-0, 3-1, 3-2, 3-3, such that the clock signal version at tap 3-0 has a phase of 0°, that a tap 3-1 has a phase of 90°, that at tap 3-2 has a phase of 180° and that a tap 3-3 has a phase of 270°, with respect to the original clock signal.
Thedelay line 2 may be, for example, a cable having taps, a cascade arrangement of LC-networks or, as shown in FIG. 1, a cascade arrangement of sections comprised of respective resistors 4-1, 4-2 and 4-3 and respective inverters 5-1, 5-2 and 5-3. The taps 3-0, 3-1, 3-2, 3-3 are connected to the sections via respective inverters 6-0, 6-1, 6-2 and 6-3. The time delay of a section is composed of the propagation time of its inverter (5) and the time constant formed by its resistor (4) and the input capacitance of its inverter (5). Each one of the taps 3-0, 3-1, 3-2 and 3-3 of thedelay line 2 is connected to anoutput 8 of the arrangement by means of an associated controlled switch 7-0, 7-1, 7-2 and 7-3. When, for example, switch 7-0 is closed and the other switches (7-1, 7-2 and 7-3) are open, the undelayed clock signal (which has a phase of 0°) derived from oscillator 1 is then available atoutput 8. By closing one of the other switches, for example switch 7-2, and opening the remaining switches (7-0, 7-1 and 7-3), the clock signal is available atoutput 8 with a phase which is shifted through 180°. In this manner it is possible to have a clock signal available atoutput 8 with, optionally, one of thephases 0°, 90°, 180° and 270°. The phase which is the optimum phase as regards the detection of the data signal will be chosen. The optimum phase occurs when the leading edge of a clock signal is in the center of a data signal bit to be detected. The signal then available atoutput 8 is the desired, regenerated clock signal, whose phase will correspond within ±45° with the optimum phase required for detection of the data signal. It will be clear that a smaller phase deviation can be obtained by providing the delay line with more taps than the 4 taps shown in FIG. 1 and by reducing the time delay of each section in proportion therewith.
The arrangement includes a coincidence detection circuit 22 by means of which the switches (7) are operated. The coincidence detection circuit 22 comprises a number of trigger circuits 9-0, 9-1, 9-2 and 9-3 of the D-type and a combinatingnetwork 10. The input data signal is applied to an input 11 of the arrangement. The data inputs D of the trigger circuits 9 are all connected to this input 11 and the trigger inputs T are connected to the inputs 23-0, 23-1, 23-2 and 23-3, respectively, of the coincidence circuit 22. The taps 3-0, 3-1, 3-2 and 3-3 are also connected to these inputs. The Q-output of each trigger circuit (9) is connected to a corresponding input (12) of thenetwork 10; that is, the Q-output of the trigger circuit 9-0 is connected to input 12-0, the Q-output of the trigger circuit 9-1 to input 12-1, the Q-output of the trigger circuit 9-2 to input 12-2 and the Q-output of the trigger circuit 9-3 to input 12-3. Outputs (13) of thenetwork 10, which also form the outputs of the coincidence circuit 22, are connected to respective control inputs (14) of the switches (7).
For simplicity, the connection between the outputs (13) and the control inputs (14) are not further shown in FIG. 1. Output 13-0 of thenetwork 10 is connected to control input 14-2, output 13-1 is connected to control input 14-3, output 13-2 is connected to control input 14-0 and output 13-3 is connected to control input 14-1.
Thenetwork 10 may be implemented with, for example, a so-called FPLA (Field Programmable Logic Array) or as shown in FIG. 1, by means of separate logic modules. Thenetwork 10 as shown in FIG. 1 comprises a number of AND-gates (15), a number of trigger circuits (16) of the SR-type and an OR-gate 17. One input of the AND-gate 15-0 is connected to input 12-0 and the other input is connected to the Q-output of trigger circuit 9-3; one input of the AND-gate 15-1 is connected to input 12-1 and the other input is connected to the Q-output of trigger circuit 9-0; one input of the AND-gate 15-2 is connected to inptu 12-2 and the other input is connected to the Q-output of trigger circuit 9-1; and one input of the AND-gate 15-3 is connected to input 12-3 and the other input is connected to the Q-output of trigger circuit 9-2. The output of each of the AND-gates 15 is connected to the set input S of the associated trigger circuit (16). The Q-outputs of these trigger circuits 16 are connected to respective outputs (13) of thenetwork 10 and to respective inputs of the OR-gate 17. Theoutput 18 of OR-gate 17 is connected to the set inputs S of the trigger circuits (9). The reset inputs R of the trigger circuits (9) and (16) are connected in common to areset input terminal 19.
The arrangement shown in FIG. 1 for synchronizing the phase of a locally generated clock signal with the phase of an input signal operates as follows.
The arrangement shown in FIG. 1 is adjusted to the zero-state by a reset signal RST, shown in FIG. 2b, which is applied to thereset input terminal 19. The input data signal IN applied to input terminal 11, is shown in FIG. 2a. The clock signals generated by oscillator 1 have a shape as shown in FIG. 2c. FIG. 2c also shows the clock signal version C1(0) which is applied to tap 3-0. Each of the other clock signal versions C1(90), C1(180) and C1 (270) which are shifted successively through 90°, as applied to the taps 3-1, 3-2 and 3-3, are shown in FIGS. 2d, 2e and 2f, respectively. The input data signal IN is applied in parallel to the data input D of the trigger circuits 9-0, 9-1, 9-2 and 9-3, each of these circuits being triggered by a different phase version of the clock signal applied to their trigger input T. After the first leading (rising) edge occurs in the input data signal IN, so that this signal is "high", the particular one of the trigger circuits (9) which is connected to receive the clock signal version whose leading (rising) edge follows with the shortest delay after the input data signal IN becomes high, will be triggered first with the other trigger currents (9) being successively triggered thereafter. FIGS. 2g, 2h, 2i, 2j show the Q-output signals resulting from this action. The Q-output of trigger circuit 9-1 will be switched first, followed by that of trigger circuit 9-2, then that of 9-3 and finally that of 9-0. By means of thenetwork 10, it is now determined in the following manner which of the trigger circuits (16) will be switched first. To this end the Q-output of each trigger circuit 9 is connected, together with the Q-output of the preceding trigger circuit 9, to AND-gates (15), as mentioned previously. In the embodiment of FIG. 2, the AND-gate 15-1 will, consequently, be opened, that is, by the Q-output signal of trigger circuit 9-1 and the Q-output signal of trigger circuit 9-0, and will set the trigger circuit 16-1, which has its set input S connected to the output of this AND-gate 15-1. The other AND-gates 15-2, 15-3 and 15-0 will not be opened because by the time each receives the Q-output signal from the associated trigger circuit (9), the preceding trigger circuit (9) has already been triggered, so that there is no Q-output signal at the gate. Thus, in no circumstances will more than one trigger circuit (16) be set. After one of the trigger circuits (16) has been set, OR-gate 17 will produce an output signal ST (FIG. 2k), causing the trigger circuits (9) to be set and to remain in the set state until a reset signal RST is next applied toinput 19. At the moment it is switched, the Q-output of trigger circuit 16-1 will apply a signal to the control input 14-3 connected to it. This causes switch 7-3 to be closed so that the clock signal version at the delay line tap 3-3 is available at the output 8 (signal OUT, FIG. 21) as the synchronized locally generated clock signal.
An advantage of the present arrangement is that, in contrast to other clock regeneration circuits which function by synchronizing the cycle of a counter or a shift register, the clock signal can be rapidly regenerated up to a bit rate of the input data signal which is equal to the maximum clock frequency of the logic used. If, for example, LOCMOS-logic is used with a maximum clock frequency of 20 MHz, then a bit rate of 20 Mbit/sec. can be processed.
In addition, the input data signal can be detected by means of the locally generated clock signal. To this end, FIG. 1 shows, for example, afurther trigger circuit 20, the data input D of which is connected to receive the input data signal IN and the trigger input T of which is connected to receive the locally generated clock signal.Output 21 supplies the detected data signal.
In the example chosen in FIG. 2, the trigger circuit 9-1 was triggered first, namely by the clock signal version C1(90) which is shifted through 90°. The fact that ultimately switch 7-3 was closed and that as a consequence the clock signal version C1(270), which is shifted through 270°, was applied tooutput 8 as the locally generated clock signal is caused by the fact that the clock signal version which is used is the one whose leading (rising) edge is located in the center of the bit of the data signal to be detected. This is achieved by introducing an extra delay of half a clock period (or 180°).
Alternatively, JK-trigger circuits can be used instead of the D-type trigger circuits (9) shown in FIG. 1, and alternatively D-type or JK-type trigger circuits may be used instead of the SR-type trigger circuits (16) shown in FIG. 1.
The arrangement according to the invention for synchronizing the phase of a locally generated clock signal with the phase of an input signal, is particularly suitable when the input data signal consists of data packets. In this case--provided the packet length is not too long--the phase of the incoming sequence will not deviate significantly from the phase of the clock of the receiver: this certainly holds if a crystal-controlled oscillator is included in the data transmitter and the data receiver. Therefore, a non-recurrent synchronization as described above is sufficient. However, the invention is not limited to this. When a continuous data stream is applied, then the usually slow drift of the phase of the crystal oscillator can be readjusted in known manner.
In practice the controllable single-pole switches are implemented as MOSFET transistors, which are controlled via their gates.

Claims (3)

What is claimed is:
1. An arrangement for synchronizing the phase of a locally generated clock signal with the phase of an input signal, comprising a clock signal generator and a delay line an input of which is connected to the generator, the delay line having a plurality of taps which are distributed along the delay line, characterized in that the duration of delay in the delay line is equal to a single clock cycle of said clock signal generator and each tap of the delay line is connected to an output of the arrangement by a respective controllable switch, the arrangement further comprising a coincidence detection circuit having inputs and outputs, each input being connected to a respective tap of the delay line and each output being connected to a control input of a respective one of the switches, and the coincidence detection circuit further being connected to an input terminal to which the input signal is to be applied and being operable for generating, when there occurs coincidence of the input signal, following an edge thereof, with an edge of the clock signal version at one of the taps of the delay line, a control signal at one of the outputs of the coincidence circuit for closing the particular switch connecting a selected tap to said output of the arrangement whereby the arrangement is capable of synchronizing the locally generated clock signal with an input signal having a bit rate up to the maximum frequency of the clock signal generator.
2. An arrangement as claimed in claim 1, characterized in that the coincidence detection circuit comprises a plurality of bistable trigger circuits, each having a trigger input, a data input, a set and a reset input and an output, each of the trigger inputs being connected to a respective input of the coincidence detection circuit and all the data inputs are connected to said input terminal, the coincidence detection circuit further comprising a combining network having inputs and outputs, the inputs of the combining network being connected to the trigger circuit outputs so as to select the trigger circuit which is triggered first, and the outputs of the combining network being connected, respectively, to the outputs of the coincidence detection circuit.
3. An arrangement as claimed in claim 2, characterized in that the combining network comprises a plurality of AND-gates and a plurality of further trigger circuits, each of the AND-gates having a first and a second input and an output, the first inputs thereof being connected to a non-inverting output of a respective one of said bistable trigger circuits, the second input of each AND-gate being connected to an inverting output of the bistable trigger circuit preceding the bistable trigger circuit the non-inverting output of which the respective first input is connected, and the output of each AND-gate being connected to a set input of a respective one of the further trigger circuits, the outputs of the further trigger circuits being connected to respective outputs of the combining network and to inputs of an OR-gate, an output of which is connected in common to the set inputs of the bistable trigger circuits, the reset inputs of the further trigger circuits and the reset inputs of the trigger circuits being inter-connected and connected to a reset input terminal.
US06/227,8921980-01-311981-01-23Arrangement for synchronizing the phase of a local clock signal with an input signalExpired - Fee RelatedUS4386323A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application NumberPriority DateFiling DateTitle
NLAANVRAGE8000606,ANL183214C (en)1980-01-311980-01-31 Apparatus for synchronizing the phase of a locally generated clock signal with the phase of an input signal.
NL80006061980-01-31

Publications (1)

Publication NumberPublication Date
US4386323Atrue US4386323A (en)1983-05-31

Family

ID=19834765

Family Applications (1)

Application NumberTitlePriority DateFiling Date
US06/227,892Expired - Fee RelatedUS4386323A (en)1980-01-311981-01-23Arrangement for synchronizing the phase of a local clock signal with an input signal

Country Status (9)

CountryLink
US (1)US4386323A (en)
JP (1)JPS56120227A (en)
BE (1)BE887296A (en)
CA (1)CA1155932A (en)
DE (1)DE3102447A1 (en)
FR (1)FR2475318A1 (en)
GB (1)GB2069263B (en)
NL (1)NL183214C (en)
SE (2)SE8100527L (en)

Cited By (45)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
US4475085A (en)*1980-09-251984-10-02Tokyo Shibaura Denki Kabushiki KaishaClock synchronization signal generating circuit
US4525674A (en)*1982-07-281985-06-25Reliance Electric CompanyCircuit for synchronizing a switching power supply to a load clock
US4575860A (en)*1984-03-121986-03-11At&T Bell LaboratoriesData clock recovery circuit
US4604582A (en)*1985-01-041986-08-05Lockheed Electronics Company, Inc.Digital phase correlator
US4617679A (en)*1983-09-201986-10-14Nec Electronics U.S.A., Inc.Digital phase lock loop circuit
US4635249A (en)*1985-05-031987-01-06At&T Information Systems Inc.Glitchless clock signal control circuit for a duplicated system
US4654599A (en)*1985-07-051987-03-31Sperry CorporationFour phase clock signal generator
US4675612A (en)*1985-06-211987-06-23Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.Apparatus for synchronization of a first signal with a second signal
US4713621A (en)*1984-03-291987-12-15Fujitsu LimitedPhase synchronization circuit
US4719365A (en)*1983-12-291988-01-12Takeda Riken Kogyo KabushikikaishaClocked logic delay device which corrects for the phase difference between a clock signal and an input binary signal
US4757264A (en)*1987-10-081988-07-12American Telephone And Telegraph Company, At&T Bell LaboratoriesSample clock signal generator circuit
US4868514A (en)*1987-11-171989-09-19International Business Machines CorporationApparatus and method for digital compensation of oscillator drift
US4877974A (en)*1987-12-041989-10-31Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki KaishaClock generator which generates a non-overlap clock having fixed pulse width and changeable frequency
US4908842A (en)*1989-02-141990-03-13Galen CollinsFlash synchronized gated sample clock generator
WO1990007238A1 (en)*1988-12-161990-06-28Datapoint CorporationMetastable-free digital synchronizer with low phase error
US4942590A (en)*1987-10-301990-07-17Kabushiki Kaisha KenwoodOptimum clock generator in data communication
DE3931259A1 (en)*1989-09-191991-03-28Siemens AgContinual matching of digital signal to clock - using output of second tapped delay line to control selection of tap on first line
WO1991004619A1 (en)*1989-09-201991-04-04Data Broadcasting CorporationMethod and apparatus for recovering data, such as teletext data encoded into television signals
US5008879A (en)*1988-11-141991-04-16Datapoint CorporationLAN with interoperative multiple operational capabilities
US5022057A (en)*1988-03-111991-06-04Hitachi, Ltd.Bit synchronization circuit
US5048014A (en)*1988-12-301991-09-10Datapoint CorporationDynamic network reconfiguration technique for directed-token expanded-address LAN
US5050189A (en)*1988-11-141991-09-17Datapoint CorporationMultibit amplitude and phase modulation transceiver for LAN
US5109394A (en)*1990-12-241992-04-28Ncr CorporationAll digital phase locked loop
US5123030A (en)*1989-03-131992-06-16Hitachi, Ltd.Timing extraction method and communication system
WO1993020633A1 (en)*1992-03-271993-10-14Motorola, Inc.Method and apparatus for modifying a decision-directed clock recovery system
US5267267A (en)*1989-03-131993-11-30Hitachi, Ltd.Timing extraction method and communication system
US5412698A (en)*1993-03-161995-05-02Apple Computer, Inc.Adaptive data separator
US5424882A (en)*1989-03-131995-06-13Hitachi, Ltd.Signal processor for discriminating recording data
FR2725572A1 (en)*1994-10-071996-04-12Mitsubishi Electric Eng SYNCHRONIZATION CIRCUIT INCLUDING BIT SYNCHRONIZATION
US5528637A (en)*1993-10-121996-06-18Alcatel N.V.Synchronizing circuit
US5610953A (en)*1991-02-221997-03-11International Business Machines CorporationAsynchronous low latency data recovery apparatus and method
US5646568A (en)*1995-02-281997-07-08Ando Electric Co., Ltd.Delay circuit
WO1998004043A1 (en)*1996-07-231998-01-29Honeywell Inc.High resolution digital synchronization circuit
US6043694A (en)*1998-06-242000-03-28Siemens AktiengesellschaftLock arrangement for a calibrated DLL in DDR SDRAM applications
US6064707A (en)*1995-12-222000-05-16Zilog, Inc.Apparatus and method for data synchronizing and tracking
US6239627B1 (en)*1995-01-032001-05-29Via-Cyrix, Inc.Clock multiplier using nonoverlapping clock pulses for waveform generation
US20010005156A1 (en)*1999-12-242001-06-28Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd.Circuit and system for extracting data
US20050285645A1 (en)*2004-06-282005-12-29Hall David RApparatus and method for compensating for clock drift in downhole drilling components
US20070124532A1 (en)*2005-04-212007-05-31Bennett Jon CInterconnection system
US20090043933A1 (en)*2006-10-232009-02-12Bennett Jon C RSkew management in an interconnection system
US20090070612A1 (en)*2005-04-212009-03-12Maxim AdelmanMemory power management
US20090150707A1 (en)*2005-04-212009-06-11Drucker Kevin DMesosynchronous data bus apparatus and method of data transmission
US20090150599A1 (en)*2005-04-212009-06-11Bennett Jon C RMethod and system for storage of data in non-volatile media
US9286198B2 (en)2005-04-212016-03-15Violin MemoryMethod and system for storage of data in non-volatile media
US9582449B2 (en)2005-04-212017-02-28Violin Memory, Inc.Interconnection system

Families Citing this family (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
JPS5986385A (en)*1982-11-091984-05-18Toshiba CorpSampling pulse producing circuit
EP0185779B1 (en)*1984-12-211990-02-28International Business Machines CorporationDigital phase locked loop
US4787095A (en)*1987-03-031988-11-22Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.Preamble search and synchronizer circuit
US4791488A (en)*1987-08-121988-12-13Rca Licensing CorporationLine-locked clock signal generation system
ATE76706T1 (en)*1988-03-221992-06-15Siemens Ag METHOD AND ARRANGEMENT FOR CONTINUOUSLY ADAPTING THE PHASE OF A BINARY DATA SIGNAL TO A CLOCK.
ATE83881T1 (en)*1988-04-291993-01-15Siemens Ag METHOD AND ARRANGEMENT FOR CLOCK RECOVERY FROM A DATA SIGNAL BY CONTINUOUS ADAPTATION OF A LOCALLY GENERATED CLOCK TO A DATA SIGNAL.
DE58908236D1 (en)*1989-02-231994-09-29Siemens Ag Method and arrangement for adapting a clock to a plesiochronous data signal and for clocking it with the adapted clock.
JP2536929B2 (en)*1989-07-211996-09-25富士通株式会社 Phase matching circuit
DE3936901A1 (en)*1989-11-061991-05-23Ant Nachrichtentech SEMICONDUCTOR CHIP WITH SEVERAL SLIDE REGISTERS
US5212716A (en)*1991-02-051993-05-18International Business Machines CorporationData edge phase sorting circuits
DE69320616T2 (en)*1993-01-281999-02-11Alsthom Cge Alcatel Synchronization circuit
KR100197563B1 (en)*1995-12-271999-06-15윤종용 Digital Delay Synchronous Loop Circuit Using Synchronous Delay Line

Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
US3029389A (en)*1960-04-201962-04-10IbmFrequency shifting self-synchronizing clock
US3509471A (en)*1966-11-161970-04-28Communications Satellite CorpDigital phase lock loop for bit timing recovery
US4027261A (en)*1974-08-271977-05-31Thomson-CsfSynchronization extractor
US4169995A (en)*1970-01-211979-10-02The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Air ForcePulse repetition frequency tracker

Family Cites Families (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
FR1422959A (en)*1964-11-131966-01-03Thomson Houston Comp Francaise Improvements to phase control devices
US3763317A (en)*1970-04-011973-10-02AmpexSystem for correcting time-base errors in a repetitive signal
JPS5563123A (en)*1978-11-041980-05-13Sony CorpPhase control circuit

Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
US3029389A (en)*1960-04-201962-04-10IbmFrequency shifting self-synchronizing clock
US3509471A (en)*1966-11-161970-04-28Communications Satellite CorpDigital phase lock loop for bit timing recovery
US4169995A (en)*1970-01-211979-10-02The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Air ForcePulse repetition frequency tracker
US4027261A (en)*1974-08-271977-05-31Thomson-CsfSynchronization extractor

Cited By (67)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication numberPriority datePublication dateAssigneeTitle
US4475085A (en)*1980-09-251984-10-02Tokyo Shibaura Denki Kabushiki KaishaClock synchronization signal generating circuit
US4525674A (en)*1982-07-281985-06-25Reliance Electric CompanyCircuit for synchronizing a switching power supply to a load clock
US4617679A (en)*1983-09-201986-10-14Nec Electronics U.S.A., Inc.Digital phase lock loop circuit
US4719365A (en)*1983-12-291988-01-12Takeda Riken Kogyo KabushikikaishaClocked logic delay device which corrects for the phase difference between a clock signal and an input binary signal
US4575860A (en)*1984-03-121986-03-11At&T Bell LaboratoriesData clock recovery circuit
US4713621A (en)*1984-03-291987-12-15Fujitsu LimitedPhase synchronization circuit
US4604582A (en)*1985-01-041986-08-05Lockheed Electronics Company, Inc.Digital phase correlator
EP0187504A3 (en)*1985-01-041986-10-08Lockheed Electronics Company Inc.Digital phase correlator
US4635249A (en)*1985-05-031987-01-06At&T Information Systems Inc.Glitchless clock signal control circuit for a duplicated system
US4675612A (en)*1985-06-211987-06-23Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.Apparatus for synchronization of a first signal with a second signal
US4654599A (en)*1985-07-051987-03-31Sperry CorporationFour phase clock signal generator
US4757264A (en)*1987-10-081988-07-12American Telephone And Telegraph Company, At&T Bell LaboratoriesSample clock signal generator circuit
US4942590A (en)*1987-10-301990-07-17Kabushiki Kaisha KenwoodOptimum clock generator in data communication
US4868514A (en)*1987-11-171989-09-19International Business Machines CorporationApparatus and method for digital compensation of oscillator drift
US4877974A (en)*1987-12-041989-10-31Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki KaishaClock generator which generates a non-overlap clock having fixed pulse width and changeable frequency
US5022057A (en)*1988-03-111991-06-04Hitachi, Ltd.Bit synchronization circuit
US5034967A (en)*1988-11-141991-07-23Datapoint CorporationMetastable-free digital synchronizer with low phase error
US5008879A (en)*1988-11-141991-04-16Datapoint CorporationLAN with interoperative multiple operational capabilities
US5050189A (en)*1988-11-141991-09-17Datapoint CorporationMultibit amplitude and phase modulation transceiver for LAN
WO1990007238A1 (en)*1988-12-161990-06-28Datapoint CorporationMetastable-free digital synchronizer with low phase error
US5048014A (en)*1988-12-301991-09-10Datapoint CorporationDynamic network reconfiguration technique for directed-token expanded-address LAN
US4908842A (en)*1989-02-141990-03-13Galen CollinsFlash synchronized gated sample clock generator
US5123030A (en)*1989-03-131992-06-16Hitachi, Ltd.Timing extraction method and communication system
US5424882A (en)*1989-03-131995-06-13Hitachi, Ltd.Signal processor for discriminating recording data
US5267267A (en)*1989-03-131993-11-30Hitachi, Ltd.Timing extraction method and communication system
DE3931259A1 (en)*1989-09-191991-03-28Siemens AgContinual matching of digital signal to clock - using output of second tapped delay line to control selection of tap on first line
WO1991004619A1 (en)*1989-09-201991-04-04Data Broadcasting CorporationMethod and apparatus for recovering data, such as teletext data encoded into television signals
GB2253124A (en)*1989-09-201992-08-26Data Broadcasting CorpMethod and apparatus for recovering data, such as teletext data encoded into television signals
GB2253124B (en)*1989-09-201994-05-04Data Broadcasting CorpMethod and apparatus for recovering data,such as teletext data encoded into television signals
US5109394A (en)*1990-12-241992-04-28Ncr CorporationAll digital phase locked loop
US5610953A (en)*1991-02-221997-03-11International Business Machines CorporationAsynchronous low latency data recovery apparatus and method
GB2273214A (en)*1992-03-271994-06-08Motorola IncMethod and apparatus for modifying a decision-directed clock recovery system
US5255292A (en)*1992-03-271993-10-19Motorola, Inc.Method and apparatus for modifying a decision-directed clock recovery system
GB2273214B (en)*1992-03-271995-10-25Motorola IncMethod and apparatus for modifying a decision-directed clock recovery system
WO1993020633A1 (en)*1992-03-271993-10-14Motorola, Inc.Method and apparatus for modifying a decision-directed clock recovery system
US5412698A (en)*1993-03-161995-05-02Apple Computer, Inc.Adaptive data separator
US5528637A (en)*1993-10-121996-06-18Alcatel N.V.Synchronizing circuit
FR2725572A1 (en)*1994-10-071996-04-12Mitsubishi Electric Eng SYNCHRONIZATION CIRCUIT INCLUDING BIT SYNCHRONIZATION
US6239627B1 (en)*1995-01-032001-05-29Via-Cyrix, Inc.Clock multiplier using nonoverlapping clock pulses for waveform generation
US5646568A (en)*1995-02-281997-07-08Ando Electric Co., Ltd.Delay circuit
US6349122B1 (en)1995-12-222002-02-19Zilog, Inc.Apparatus and method for data synchronizing and tracking
US6064707A (en)*1995-12-222000-05-16Zilog, Inc.Apparatus and method for data synchronizing and tracking
WO1998004043A1 (en)*1996-07-231998-01-29Honeywell Inc.High resolution digital synchronization circuit
US6043694A (en)*1998-06-242000-03-28Siemens AktiengesellschaftLock arrangement for a calibrated DLL in DDR SDRAM applications
US20010005156A1 (en)*1999-12-242001-06-28Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd.Circuit and system for extracting data
EP1111836A3 (en)*1999-12-242004-10-06Matsushita Electronics CorporationCircuit and system for extracting data
US6970521B2 (en)1999-12-242005-11-29Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd.Circuit and system for extracting data
US7253671B2 (en)2004-06-282007-08-07Intelliserv, Inc.Apparatus and method for compensating for clock drift in downhole drilling components
US20050285645A1 (en)*2004-06-282005-12-29Hall David RApparatus and method for compensating for clock drift in downhole drilling components
US20070124532A1 (en)*2005-04-212007-05-31Bennett Jon CInterconnection system
US9384818B2 (en)2005-04-212016-07-05Violin MemoryMemory power management
US20090070612A1 (en)*2005-04-212009-03-12Maxim AdelmanMemory power management
US20090150707A1 (en)*2005-04-212009-06-11Drucker Kevin DMesosynchronous data bus apparatus and method of data transmission
US20090150599A1 (en)*2005-04-212009-06-11Bennett Jon C RMethod and system for storage of data in non-volatile media
US10417159B2 (en)2005-04-212019-09-17Violin Systems LlcInterconnection system
US10176861B2 (en)2005-04-212019-01-08Violin Systems LlcRAIDed memory system management
US9727263B2 (en)2005-04-212017-08-08Violin Memory, Inc.Method and system for storage of data in a non-volatile media
US8112655B2 (en)2005-04-212012-02-07Violin Memory, Inc.Mesosynchronous data bus apparatus and method of data transmission
US8452929B2 (en)2005-04-212013-05-28Violin Memory Inc.Method and system for storage of data in non-volatile media
US8726064B2 (en)2005-04-212014-05-13Violin Memory Inc.Interconnection system
US9582449B2 (en)2005-04-212017-02-28Violin Memory, Inc.Interconnection system
US9286198B2 (en)2005-04-212016-03-15Violin MemoryMethod and system for storage of data in non-volatile media
US20090043933A1 (en)*2006-10-232009-02-12Bennett Jon C RSkew management in an interconnection system
US8806262B2 (en)2006-10-232014-08-12Violin Memory, Inc.Skew management in an interconnection system
US8090973B2 (en)2006-10-232012-01-03Violin Memory, Inc.Skew management in an interconnection system
US8028186B2 (en)2006-10-232011-09-27Violin Memory, Inc.Skew management in an interconnection system
US20110060857A1 (en)*2006-10-232011-03-10Violin Memory, Inc.Skew management in an interconnection system

Also Published As

Publication numberPublication date
SE449941B (en)1987-05-25
NL183214C (en)1988-08-16
JPS56120227A (en)1981-09-21
NL8000606A (en)1981-09-01
FR2475318A1 (en)1981-08-07
DE3102447A1 (en)1981-11-19
SE8100527L (en)1981-08-01
DE3102447C2 (en)1989-05-11
CA1155932A (en)1983-10-25
GB2069263A (en)1981-08-19
FR2475318B1 (en)1984-05-11
GB2069263B (en)1983-11-30
BE887296A (en)1981-07-29
NL183214B (en)1988-03-16

Similar Documents

PublicationPublication DateTitle
US4386323A (en)Arrangement for synchronizing the phase of a local clock signal with an input signal
US5488641A (en)Digital phase-locked loop circuit
US3982195A (en)Method and apparatus for decoding diphase signals
JPS60227541A (en)Digital phase locked loop type decoder
CA2037739C (en)Frame synchronization dependent type bit synchronization extraction circuit
US3731219A (en)Phase locked loop
US6137332A (en)Clock signal generator and data signal generator
EP0491090B1 (en)Synchronizing circuit
EP1158415B1 (en)Parallel data interface
US4887261A (en)Method and arrangement for transmitting a digital signal with a low bit rate in a time section, provided for higher bit rates, of a time division multiplexed signal
US6973149B2 (en)Arrangement for capturing data
JPS62290228A (en)Electric apparatus
US4034302A (en)Smooth sequence generator for fractional division purposes
US7274230B2 (en)System and method for clockless data recovery
US5146478A (en)Method and apparatus for receiving a binary digital signal
US6058151A (en)Digital phase shift phase-locked loop for data and clock recovery
US3452294A (en)Digit rate synchronisation of a network of digital stations
JP2628564B2 (en) Phase locked loop circuit and signal transmitting / receiving device
SU1626429A1 (en)Phase corrector
RU2054809C1 (en)Device for synchronization of digital flows
JPS62268274A (en)Horizontal synchronism reproducing circuit
JPS63169845A (en)External timing system
JPS61142834A (en)Channel synchronizing circuit for multi-channel separator
JPH0193280A (en)Synchronizing circuit
JPS62137930A (en) frame counter

Legal Events

DateCodeTitleDescription
ASAssignment

Owner name:U.S. PHILIPS CORPORATION, 1OO EAST 42ND ST., NEW

Free format text:ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST.;ASSIGNOR:JANSEN, GERARDUS L. M.;REEL/FRAME:003917/0397

Effective date:19810916

MAFPMaintenance fee payment

Free format text:PAYMENT OF MAINTENANCE FEE, 4TH YEAR, PL 96-517 (ORIGINAL EVENT CODE: M170); ENTITY STATUS OF PATENT OWNER: LARGE ENTITY

Year of fee payment:4

MAFPMaintenance fee payment

Free format text:PAYMENT OF MAINTENANCE FEE, 8TH YEAR, PL 96-517 (ORIGINAL EVENT CODE: M171); ENTITY STATUS OF PATENT OWNER: LARGE ENTITY

Year of fee payment:8

FEPPFee payment procedure

Free format text:PAYOR NUMBER ASSIGNED (ORIGINAL EVENT CODE: ASPN); ENTITY STATUS OF PATENT OWNER: LARGE ENTITY

FEPPFee payment procedure

Free format text:MAINTENANCE FEE REMINDER MAILED (ORIGINAL EVENT CODE: REM.); ENTITY STATUS OF PATENT OWNER: LARGE ENTITY

LAPSLapse for failure to pay maintenance fees
FPLapsed due to failure to pay maintenance fee

Effective date:19950531

STCHInformation on status: patent discontinuation

Free format text:PATENT EXPIRED DUE TO NONPAYMENT OF MAINTENANCE FEES UNDER 37 CFR 1.362


[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp